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Dreyfuss is comfortable discussing the sweep of human history, but he's especially drawn to the drama of the Civil War. In March, he was the star attraction at a Washington, D.C., event for the Civil War Preservation Trust, which annually releases a report on endangered battlefields. His interest in the Civil War goes way back, and he was recruited as a re-enactor at the battle of Cedar Creek, in northern Virginia, while filming "What About Bob?," which was set at New Hampshire's Lake Winnipesaukee but filmed at Smith Mountain Lake in Virginia. Dreyfuss won an Oscar at 29 for "The Goodbye Girl," making him then the youngest male lead to win the trophy. He said the honor wasn't necessarily a good thing. "I was too young," he said. "I didn't know until later that I am built to be in pursuit. I am not built to have achieved. I'm happiest when I'm on the hunt." The Dreyfuss Initiative has put the actor back in the hunt -- for a Nobel
Peace Prize. "Not to be glib about it, because nothing about this is glib, but I'm going for the Nobel," he said. "I'd rather have a lofty ambition."
[Associated
Press;
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